ethnography 2015 marrero guillamón 240 61
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Ethnography
2015, Vol. 16(2) 240261
! The Author(s) 2014
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Article
Monadology and
ethnography: Towards aTardian monadicethnography
Isaac Marrero-GuillamonGoldsmiths, University of London, UK
Abstract
This article outlines the project of a monadic ethnography based on Gabriel Tardesmonadology. Tardes key contention is that everything is a society, i.e. that the world ismade up of composite and relational entities of infinitesimal complexity called monads.These assemblages of heterogeneous elements engaged in relations of mutual posses-sion constitute the object of study of monadic ethnography. Their analysis, in turn, hasa series of methodological and formal implications, including a transformation of con-cepts of scale, spatiality and temporality and the need to find representational strategiessuitable for conveying the monads dynamic qualities. A fieldwork example which dis-cusses the making of a car part in a small workshop based in the Can Ricart factory inBarcelona is provided. Throughout the article, the idea of monadic ethnography isdiscussed in relation to the recent rediscovery of Tardes work, the work of BrunoLatour and Gilles Deleuze, and the so-called ontological turn in the social sciences.
Keywords
Gabriel Tarde, monadology, methodology, ontology, actor-network theory
The restoration of sociologist, criminologist, social psychologist and judge Gabriel
Tarde (18431904) to the pantheon of social theory seems to be steadily under way.
Almost forgotten after succumbing to E mile Durkheim as the leading figure of
French sociology, his work has recently enjoyed a remarkable comeback. Very little
attention had been paid to Tardes work until the French re-edition, from 1999
onwards, of most of his work under the direction of Eric Alliez. Since then, Tarde
has been praised by Bruno Latour (2002, 2005) as the precursor to actor-network
Corresponding author:
Isaac Marrero-Guillamon, Department of Anthropology, Goldsmiths, University of London, London
SE14 6NW, UK.
Email: [email protected]
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theory; taken up by Maurizio Lazzarato (2004) as the foundation for a new politics
of multiplicity; his great controversy with Durkheim reconstructed (Viana Vargas
et al., 2008) and even re-enacted;1 and his work been the subject of at least one
conference,2 special issues in various academic journals,3 and an edited book
(Candea, 2010a).
The recent translation into English of Tardes 1895 masterpiece Monadologie et
Sociologie (Tarde, 2012), the most metaphysical of the works of the most philo-
sophical of sociologists (Alliez, 1999; cited in Lorenc, 2012), adds an important
piece to this revival. Tardes monadology which radically reconfigures the
Leibnizian ontology it is based upon is arguably one of his most remarkable
theoretical contributions. The aim of this article is to explore its far-reaching impli-
cations for the conceptualization and study of the social, and to relate those to the
practice of ethnographic research.The article is organized as follows: in the next section, Gabriel Tardes redis-
covery and some of his key ideas will be briefly discussed. Then, his monadology
will be presented in some detail. This is followed by an ethnographic interlude,
which will be used in turn to inform the monadic ethnography proposal developed
in the following section. The article concludes with a wider consideration of Tardes
interest for ethnography in relation to recent debates around a so-called onto-
logical turn in the social sciences.
Rediscovering Gabriel Tarde
A good part of the recent literature on Tarde revisits his intellectual dispute with
Emile Durkheim over the nature and scope of sociology (e.g. Alliez, 2004; Candea,
2010a; Latour, 2002, 2005; Mucchielli, 2000; Thomassen, 2012; Viana Vargas,
1998). It was, we are told, a foundational moment for the discipline. Durkheims
victory would not only explain sociologys becoming over the 20th century, but
also the strangeness that reading Tarde produces today and his near disappearance
from the history of social theory. For those who sympathize with his arguments,
Tarde represents the path not taken, and going back to his work the possibility ofplotting a line of flight from sociology (and indeed the social sciences) as we know it
today (Candea, 2010b). This new wave of interest in Tarde has proved fruitful in
reactivating several of his intellectual endeavours, including a statistics of the fluc-
tuations of belief and desire (Barry, 2010; Didier, 2010); an economic psychology
or science of passionate interests (Latour and Le pinay, 2009); the theorization
of contagion and virality in relation to media (Sampson, 2012); or a monadic
sociology of associations (Latour, 2005; Latour et al., 2012). In this article, I will
avoid the controversy with Durkheim, already well discussed in the literature
cited above, and focus instead on Tardes monadology, as seen from an ethnog-raphers point of view. In doing this, I wish to continue a line of work advanced by
Matei Candea (2010b) and Eduardo Viana Vargas (2010), who already identified
the specific potential of Tardes monadological hypothesis for ethnographic
research. More broadly, the monadic ethnography proposal outlined in this
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article is closely related to assemblage theory and actor-network theory (ANT
hereafter), which is the reason why I will introduce the work of Tarde via
Deleuze and Latour.4
In 1968 Gilles Deleuze published Difference et repetition a book whose title
already indicates an unequivocal Tardian filiation. In a long footnote, he praises
Tardes work and concludes: All of Tardes philosophy may be presented . . . as a
dialectic of difference and repetition which founds the possibility of a microsociol-
ogy upon a whole cosmology (Deleuze, 1994: 314). There are two focal points of
interest here. The first relates to Tardes thesis that repetition, adaptation and
opposition are in that order the fundamental dynamics that govern all phe-
nomena (Tarde, 2000). In the case of human societies, he argued that this triad
took the specific form of imitation-innovation-opposition, the idea being that it is
through and by repetition (imitation) that difference is produced and distributed(as either innovations or oppositions):
. . . it is because certain social phenomena, such as a dogma, phrase, scientific prin-
ciple, moral maxim, prayer, industrial process, or the like, tend to spread in a geo-
metrical ratio by imitative repetition, that they interfere with one another in a
felicitous or infelicitous manner. That is, the discordant sides of their nature come
together in certain minds, giving rise to logical or teleological duels, which constitute
first germs of social oppositions (wars, competitions, and polemics); while the harmo-
nious sides of their nature come together in the mind of the genius, or sometimes evenin the ordinary mind, producing true logical syntheses, inventions, and fruitful ori-
ginations, which are the source of all social adaptation. (Tarde, 2000: 634)
The quote above apart from a fitting introduction to Tardes peculiar writing
style hints at Tardes infinitesimal or molecular approach, the second focal
point of interest for Deleuze, further developed with Fe lix Guattari in A Thousand
Plateaus. Tardes analyses insist in tracing those imitations, oppositions and innov-
ations back to their origin in the infinitely small, where the key to the big and
regular lies. As he put it: instead of thus explaining lesser facts by greater, and thepart by the whole, I explain collective resemblances of the whole by the massing
together of minute elementary acts the greater by the lesser and the whole by the
part (2000: 35). Deleuze and Guattari crucially argued that this form of micro-
sociology was not, as Durkheim claimed, devoted to the individual, but to flows
or waves instead:
Imitation is the propagation of a flow; opposition is binarization, the making binary of
flows; invention is a conjugation or connection of different flows. What, according to
Tarde, is a flow? It is belief or desire (the two aspects of every assemblage).. . .
[In] themolecular realm of beliefs and desires . . . the distinction between the social and the
individual loses all meaning since flows are neither attributable to individuals nor
overcodable by collective signifiers. (Deleuze and Guattari, 1989: 219, emphasis in
original)
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I will come back to the issue of belief and desire and the individual/collective
dualism below, in relation to Tardes monadology. But before doing so, I will end
this section with a brief introduction to Bruno Latours engagement with Tarde.
In a series of key texts (2002, 2005, 2010; Latour et al., 2012), Latour has
reclaimed Tarde as a precursor to ANT, on the grounds that he had anticipated
by almost 100 years the idea of a sociology of association:
[Tarde] vigorously maintained that the social was not a special domain of reality but a
principle of connections; that there was no reason to separate the social from other
associations like biological organisms or even atoms. . . . Above all, he considered the
social as a circulating fluid that should be followed by new methods and not a specific
type of organism. (Latour, 2005: 13)
Because of this general principle of society as association, Tardes sociology
ignored the nature/society divide as well as the micro/macro distinction two of
ANTs most important contributions to social theory. Regarding the former, Tarde
argued that society is a universal form of association, shared between human and
non-human entities, and hence highlighted the inadequacy of starting from a divide
between natural and social facts a` la Durkheim. With regards to the micro/macro
distinction, Tardes relational and infinitesimal approach invalidates it to a large
extent, in the sense that the small reveals itself to be richer and more complex than
the big, which in fact is a mere extension of some of its components (Latour,2002). I will now turn to Tardes monadology, where these counterintuitive pos-
itions are explained in detail.
Gabriel Tardes monadology
The monads, children of Leibniz, have come a long way since their birth (Tarde,
2012: 5). Monadology and Sociologys (hereafter MS) first sentence already intro-
duces an important caveat: these monads are rather different from Leibnizs. The
term monad, from the Greek monas, a unit or a one, has a long tradition inphilosophical writings, dating back to the Pythagoreans, but it was Leibniz who
popularized it in the early 1700s. In the modern sense it is used to describe: (1) a
simple, irreducible, and sometimes indestructible entity; and (2) the minimal unity
into which the cosmos and all composite things in it can be resolved; yet (3) con-
taining within itself, in contrast to material atoms, powers and relations of which it
is itself the source (Loemker, 2006: 324). Traditionally, a monadology is a meta-
physical system that interprets the world as a harmonious unity encompassing a
plurality of such self-determining simple entities (Loemker, 2006: 324). In other
words, classic monadologies entail a theory of cosmic harmony, based on thecoordination of a multiplicity of monads, themselves considered active substances.
In Leibniz, monads are differentiated and differentiating, but also closed (monads
have no windows, as he famously put it [1898: 219]) and subject to a higher
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principle of harmony ensured by the existence of the supreme Monad, or God (see
Viana Vargas, 1998).
Tardes monadology departs from this philosophical tradition in key ways. It
is, first of all, secular; there is no God and no pre-determined harmony. It is,
also, an open and infinitesimal system, where monads affect each other and are
themselves composite entities. MSs central hypothesis (p. 28) is that everything
is a society, that every phenomenon is a social fact: from cells to stars, both
living things and inorganic beings, they are all societies where social and
society refer, as Latour indicated, to a form of association rather than any
particular entity. It is worth examining how he arrives at this remarkable inver-
sion of both Spencers society as organism thesis (1906) and Durkheims first
rule of the sociological method, to consider social facts as things (1982). First,
Tarde argues that reality is made out of monads, which, contrary to Leibniz, arenot the simple elements that make up aggregates, but composite entities them-
selves. Drawing from findings in physics, cellular theory and chemistry, he argues
that science has repeatedly shown how so-called individual bodies (e.g. planets,
cells, parasites) were in fact a multiplicity of distinct elements linked to each
other in the same way as they are linked to the elements of other aggregates
(MS: 6). It is only because we look at things from a distance and they are
unknown to us that we believe them to be indistinct, undifferentiated, and homo-
genous. . . But everywhere where a scientist digs beneath the indistinction which is
apparent to us, he discovers an unexpected treasury of distinctions (MS: 24). Theprogress of science, he says, continues to break more and more of these indivis-
ible bodies into highly complex constructions, furnished with a specific architec-
ture and animated by highly varied internal movements (MS: 9). In fact, it is in
the infinitely small where increasing complexity is found and where actions ori-
ginate, emanating from a multitude of agents who are so many invisible and
innumerable little gods (MS: 25) (Tarde also calls them hidden workers). We
know this, Tarde argues, because we can extrapolate what we know from being
able to observe human society from within:
If we look at the social world, the only one known to us from the inside, we see agents,
men, much more differentiated and more sharply characterized as individuals, and
richer in continual variations, than are the mechanisms of government or the systems
of laws or of beliefs, or even dictionaries or grammars, and this differentiation is
maintained by their competition. A historical fact is simpler and clearer than the
states of mind of any of its actors. (MS: 37)
The example above points at two essential characteristic of monads or societies:
first, that difference (or heterogeneity), and not identity (or homogeneity), is attheir core (Viana Vargas, 2010); second, that because these entities are the result of
the relations between their components or, more exactly, a provisional reflection of
the hegemony of some of them over others, they are unstable. Tarde talks about the
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internal revolts that break apart all great regular mechanisms, provoked by the
fact that
their constitutive elements, the soldiers of these diverse regiments, the temporary
incarnation of their laws, always belong only by one aspect of their being to the
world they constitute, and by other aspects escape it. . . . The attributes which each
element possesses in virtue of its incorporation into its regiment do not form the whole
of its nature; it has other tendencies and other instincts which come to it from its other
regimentations; and, moreover . . .still others which come to it from its basic nature,
from itself, from its own fundamental substance which is the basis of its struggle
against the collective power of which it forms a part. (MS: 47)
This sense of internal agitation and instability is linked to the basic drive ofmonads: they are powerless in isolation, so they tend to associate; they are endowed
with belief and desire, so they aim to conquer and possess other monads:
Each monad draws the world to itself, and thus has a better grasp of itself. Of course,
they are parts of each other, but they can belong to each other to a greater or lesser
extent, and each aspires to the highest degree of possession; whence their gradual
concentration; and besides, they can belong to each other in a thousand different
ways, and each aspires to learn new ways to appropriate its peers. Hence their trans-
formations. They transform in order to conquer; but, since none will ever submit toanother except out of self-interest, none can fully accomplish its ambitious dream, and
the sovereign monad is exploited by its vassal monads, even as it makes use of them.
(MS: 578)
Like unsettled particles in search of a companion, monads are bundles of posses-
sive agencies eager to possess each other, objects of reciprocal desires and beliefs
(Debaise, 2008). And this mutual possession, the very definition of society for
Tarde, does not tend towards a pre-established harmony a` la Leibniz; it remains
a continuous movement of shifting hegemonies and possessions.Relations of possession or having are indeed more fundamental and offer a
much more promising footing for social theory than the old philosophy of being,
says Tarde. Being is a crude measure of existence: it cannot be quantified, it is
folded upon itself. Possession, on the other hand, reinforces the priority of relations
in the constitution of reality and, as the fundamental drive of monads, is univer-
sally applicable. As he puts it in an often-quoted passage:
All philosophy hitherto has been based on the verb Be, the definition of which was
the philosophers stone, which all sought to discover. We may affirm that, if ithad been based on the verb Have, many sterile debates and fruitless intellectual exer-
tions would have been avoided. From this principle, I am, all the subtlety in the world
has not made it possible to deduce any existence other than my own: hence the neg-
ation of external reality. If, however, the postulate I have is posited as the
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fundamental fact, both that which has and that which is had are given inseparably
at once. (MS: 52).
I will come back to the implications for ethnography of this conceptualization of
monads as unstable and heterogeneous assemblages of infinitesimal complexity
defined by their relations of possession. But first, let me provide some empirical
material to inform the discussion.
The black cap
This ethnographic interlude is taken from a study of the conflict surrounding the
eviction and demolition of the Can Ricart factory in Barcelona, approved by the
City Council as part of a rezoning plan affecting the citys industrial district
(Poblenou). I conducted fieldwork between 2005 and 2007, a period in which,
among other things, a wide alliance to save the factory was formed, evictions were
resisted and alternative plans produced, negotiations with the Council were held, most
workshops ended up being displaced, and part of the factory was listed as industrial
heritage. The following situation took place in June 2005, when most of the businesses
still had not left the factory and were indeed resisting eviction orders and trying to
negotiate better compensation payments.5
Daniel Iracheta founded his precision machining company in the 1950s. He
started in Mariano Aguilo Street, in the Poblenou neighbourhood, and when busi-ness grew he moved into a bigger workshop in San Joan de Malta Street. He had to
move again in 1974, because of the City Councils plans to extend the Diagonal
Avenue, which, however, took 25 years to complete. He found a suitable space in
Can Ricart, which had by then been divided into several workshops 700 square
meters, said Vicente, enough for his 40 machines and workers. The dog, which had
been barking all along, finally stopped as I paid him some attention. Vicentes office
sat above the shop floor, and through the window one could see and hear the
workers and the machines downstairs.
Daniel Iracheta died in 1995, aged 71, and the company, now managed by hiswife Emilia, changed its name to Iracheta Ltd. This had huge implications for the
current situation, Vicente continued, because the landlord didnt accept the con-
tinuity of the previous indefinite lease and made them sign a new five-year contract,
which had by now expired and was renewed on a monthly basis. Compensation
payments were based on the length of the contract, so they were not only facing
eviction but the possibility of having to close. They needed about 50 million pesetas
to move to a new location, and had only been offered eight million. Im not an
actual employee, Vicente clarified, but Ive been helping out with the accounting
since my father-in-law died and my mother took charge. I used to work in a bank,so I know about these things. I retired a few years ago. My daughter does work for
the company, he said, as Bele n came in and briefly joined the conversation.
The relationship with The Car Company had profoundly shaped Iracheta since
they had started working for them in the 1970s. From the layout of the workshop
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to the accounting practices, everything had been adapted to the manufacturers
requirements and protocols. In fact, in 1990 they were awarded the Y9 Quality
Status certification, which recognized their excellence as suppliers and would soon
be a requirement to work for The Car Company. Vicente pointed at the wall, where
the certificate hung. Its a Total Quality Management system, said Bele n. It covers
everything from you picking up the phone until the part is delivered. Weve got a
quality manual which specifies all the processes: making a budget, ordering mater-
ials, storing parts, packing things for delivery.. . . It allows you to prove that the
part has been produced as you are supposed to. There is a record of everything we
do: the measurements that were taken from the sample for quality control, the data
generated by the statistical software where you introduce them, the certificates of
treatment and painting, and so on. And not only with respect to manufacturing,
said Vicente. There are requirements about minimum stock (for example to preventdisruptions in case of a strike), and a storage and labelling system that allowed
inspectors to come and check the production without even asking.
Down in the shop floor, Vicente and Bele n showed me the different machine-
tools, the storage area and some of the parts they made. Among them was a small
black cap, the last part they made for The Car Company. It covers the screw of the
rear window handle in the Model Qiu, he said. Its a hinged window, the glass
doesnt go up and down, but instead has a lever mechanism to push it out. Already
the old Model Alegria used that part. We have been making it for 25 years now,
exclusively for the whole world. It may not look like it, but it is a very complicatedprocess, Vicente told me with a smile. I invited him to continue.
The raw material, a 0.50 mm thick metal sheet, comes from The Northern
Foundry. Following the technical specifications of The Car Company, it has to
be custom-made using a special alloy. Engineers, he said, dont think how much
money they would save if they followed standards. The Northern Foundry is a big
company, the minimum order they take is 20,000 kilograms. The sheet comes in
rolls of 2000 meters, which are loaded into the machine. First, the progressive
stamping press cuts a circular shape, leaving two small tips; it then squashes it,
constipates the bottom, and finally cuts the two tips that held the piece. It allhappens continuously. Do you know what I mean? Pum-pum-pum. We used to
have one of those presses, but it is like anything, you have to be an expert to get it
right. My father-in-law was a mechanic, and the progressive presses are for pro-
fessionals. But he wouldnt have got the job if he didnt have the press, so he, a
gutsy person, just bought one. He later realized he couldnt master the process, so
he asked other nearby workshops to do it for him. It had to be done very precisely,
it took him some time to find someone who could actually make it properly. He
finally gave the job to some guy called Ferna ndez, who had two fine presses and
was also based in the neighbourhood.But I have to tell you something, he continued. The part bears little resemblance
with the original drawing by The Car Company. I mean, the cap is still a cap, but
the angles, the radii and all these things are quite different. The stuff they drew
could not be manufactured. Vicente laughed. Sure, they may be good drawings, but
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theyre impossible to make, especially at the price they want to. The cap was
supposed to be more rounded, but with those measures there was no way to
attach it to the screw. It just couldnt be hammered onto it. Or maybe it could,
but then the press would need 16 operations instead of four, and this would mean
making the part a lot more expensive. So we had to modify the angle, make it more
open, because a sharp edge generates resistance. The engineers at The Car
Company never wanted to admit it, thats just how they are, but hey, its the
only way the cap can be assembled.
There was this time when their manager was on sick leave and we were told by
his substitute to make the caps properly. When the old manager later came back
and saw the parts, he went What the hell have you done? Theyll be returned!
And indeed they were. So we had to make them badly again. He even showed us
all the paperwork and said that nobody had ever okd the changes, but everyoneturned a blind eye because they knew that was the only way to get them done at
that price.
Once machined, Vicente continued, we take the parts to thermal treatment to
increase their resistance. They have to be tempered, they need to be springy so that
you can hammer them onto the screw later on. Once tempered, the parts have to be
stripped off the husk of the treatment, otherwise the paint wont stick. The paint-
ing, by the way, is done in Alicante by cataphoresis. First, they give the parts a
degreasing bath, to remove the oil from the previous processes and make sure they
are perfectly clean. Then they are placed in racks that are immersed in the electro-coating bath, which works electrically and takes the exact amount of paint for each
piece, microns. This is done by girls, said Vicente, because they have skinny fingers
and are faster putting the parts in the rack. Once painted, the parts are brought
here and we take them to a polyester treatment. This is expensive, because you have
to put the parts one by one in another rack and spray-paint them. It also has to be
the exact amount of paint. The cataphoresis and the polyester should add between
70 and 100 microns. It cant be more than that or the piece wont fit later on.
There was once a purchasing manager at The Car Company who said from now
on electrocoating only, to save costs. You cant see the polyester treatment, and allthe interior black metal parts look good with the cataphoresis paint only, so she
thought it was worth trying. But these caps are external parts, and the sun eats
them and they rust. So we went back to the polyester treatment. In fact, in the
beginning, at the time of the first Model Alegria, they were chromium-plated. But
that was too expensive, it cost more than 40 pesetas per piece. Thats when they
decided for cataphoresis plus polyester. Now they cost about 25 pesetas. But our
share is minimal, he said. 1.20 pesetas, the same as the raw material; electrocoating
plus transport to Alicante cost about 6 or 7 pesetas, polyester treatment 12. . .
Vicente laughed. Yes, yes, I know, its a very laborious process, totally irrational.Other manufacturers, like Peugeot, have a much simpler system, a single piece of
plastic with the cap already included in the hinge, and an inside screw. But you
know what happens? In these large companies it is very difficult to change things.
No one dares.
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We used to supply the caps directly to The Car Company, because we had the
Y9 certification. But it all changed in the 80s. If a car had say 50,000 parts, they
probably had 20,000 providers. And managing that was crazy purchasing man-
agers and departments everywhere. So at some point they decided they werent
going to buy parts anymore, but entire assembled components instead. They
reduced the number of providers by a factor of 20 and also asked them to
demand their subcontractors the Y9 or ISO9000 certification. I think this was
pioneered by Superlopez, the guy who left General Motors for Volkswagen,
remember him? So, anyway, we stopped supplying the cap directly to The Car
Company and started selling it instead to Peninsula Glassware, which were assem-
bling the windows. The Car Company basically forced them to buy the part from
us. Thing is, Peninsula Glassware was later bought by a French multinational,
Saint-Germain, and I remember the new people at quality control were reluctantto accept the caps at first, because they didnt correspond to the original drawings.
We had to explain to them that that was the way they had to be and that we were
not going to change it. In fact, they never wanted the cap in the first place, because
it is hammered onto a metal screw which has the exact diameter of the window
hole, and sometimes the glass breaks when assembling it. They wanted the whole
part to be made of plastic, like the Peugeot one, because if you force a plastic screw
against the window hole, you scrape the plastic instead of breaking the glass. Its
even more airtight. But The Car Company has never wanted to change it, maybe
because the Model Qiu is supposed to be discontinued soon. In fact, when we stillsold the cap directly to them, my father-in-law had to make special nylon hammers
for them, so they didnt crush the caps when hammering them onto the screw. He
even put a magnet inside the hammers, so the workers could grab the caps more
easily. Vicente nodded his head.
It was lunchtime and the workers were leaving the workshop. Most of them
would go home during the two-hour break. Bele n joined us again. There are fewer
and fewer businesses that want to work for the car industry these days, she said. Its
very competitive, too competitive. Prices go up, expenses go up, but they still force
you to be 5 per cent cheaper each year. Do what you need to do, they say, youalready know the part youre making. So each year we have to somehow sort it
out.. . . We used to make 15 parts for them, and now we only do this one. Its
because of that; as time goes by you lose your profit margin.
You know what happens?, interrupted Vicente. You have to make a lot of parts
to compensate for the yearly discount. You start with a good price, but after three
or four years you are just breaking even on it. And after another three years youre
losing money on it. But if you make more parts, and invoice for say 500 million
pesetas and manage to make a 10 per cent or 5 per cent profit, then thats fine. You
lose money on some, and make money on others, but overall you are still making aprofit. Of course, this is a cheap and convenient system for them: they know they
are paying a fair price on 25 to 30 per cent of the parts; and they also know you are
barely breaking even on 30 per cent of the parts and losing money on the rest. But
they have managed to lower the total price by 20 per cent. If you only make a few
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parts you just cant make it. This is what happened to us, and thats why my father-
in-law eventually stopped manufacturing the other parts for them. They didnt like
that at the headquarters in Germany, and they wanted to stop all trade with us. But
of course the cap is basically our design. I mean, were the ones who have the
original drawings, not of the part itself, which at the end of the day its their design,
but the ones for the stamping press. They could draw them again, but it would cost
them a lot. And since the Model Qiu is, so to speak, an endangered species, its not
worth it.
I looked again at the black cap, only a couple of centimetres in size and a few
grams in weight, before heading to the canteen.
Towards a monadic ethnography I: ObjectIn this section the proposal for a monadic ethnography will be outlined, drawing
both from the theoretical discussion and the example presented above. My aim is to
explore what it would mean for ethnographic research to take as its starting point
Tardes monadology, that is, how his pansocial (Lorenc, 2012) ontological
hypothesis everything is a society may be translated into methodological
strategies for doing ethnography. As it will become apparent, monadic ethnog-
raphy adopts and combines Deleuzian and Latournian appropriations of
Tardes work.
Researching monads means, first of all, that our objects of study are betterunderstood as relational assemblages or entanglements. That is, as constellations
of singularities (Deleuze and Guattari, 1989), multiplicities made up of heteroge-
neous parts in relation. This in turn means that, if interrogated with sufficient
sensitivity, elements are also likely to reveal themselves as composite entities ad
infinitum. In other words, every monad is, potentially, a monad of monads. This
explains Tardes infinitesimal approach to sociology, understood as a descent
into the small, which is more complex and indeed explains the big. As
Latour et al. have put it, commenting on this issue, Tardes hypothesis is that
there is more complexity in the elements than in the aggregates, or stated a bitmore provocatively that The whole is always smaller than its parts (Latour
et al., 2012: 591, emphasis in original; see also Kwa, 2002; Law, 2004). This is
an image I find useful to the extent that it conveys a sense of the monads counter-
intuitive internal architecture. But as explained above, Tardes monadology is a
system of open relations where monads relate to other monads and where, at least
in principle, everything could be connected to everything. This means that in add-
ition to consisting of a multiplicity of parts, monads are also likely to be part of
larger multiplicities.6 Therefore, what we identify as a monad at each stage of our
analyses is to a large degree an effect of our position and perspective with regardsto the relational web we are tapping into.
The story of the black cap provides a good example of this. First, the cap can
only be understood through the association of workers, machines, production
protocols, clients, raw materials, transport networks, etc. If inspected closely, it
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would not be hard to see in each of those entities monads-within-the-monad: the
technical drawings, the production instructions, the contracts and the suppliers
could all become entanglements in themselves, subject to the same dynamic of
heterogeneity, coordination and instability as the car part itself. Moreover, in
exploring the connections that shaped the black cap, such disparate processes
as Barcelonas renewal plans, new industrial groupings in France and changes in
the supply chain for a certain car company based in Germany became entangled.
Importantly, the relations and connections between and within monads are
modulated by their basic drive, their avidity. This eagerness means that
monads engage in a constant dynamic of mutual possession: they will try to con-
quer or assimilate other monads, and will in turn be approached and taken by
others. Their desire for hegemony will sooner or later be met by another monads
competing avidity, resulting in a never-ending process of coupling and decouplingand a permanent battle for hegemony. Using more contemporary terms, there is no
escape from relations of power in the study of monads, understood as a circulation
rather than a location.7 Monads are unstable arrangements, not so much in the
sense of being permanently at risk of falling apart, but in the sense that their
crystallization at any given time is the result of a provisional equilibrium between
forces. Vicente and Bele ns narrative provided clear evidence of how power modu-
lated the relations between the parts: the German headquarters, for instance,
exerted an increasing hegemony by reshuffling the supply chain at one point,
demanding the ISO9000 standard, and in the form of a 5 per cent annual discountrate. Rather than a metaphysics of cosmic harmony in the vein of classic monadolo-
gies, Tardes neo-monadology is an ontology of universal struggle.
The above remarks suggest that doing monadic ethnography consists, to a large
extent, in delving into this potentially infinite unfolding of relations and new
monads, and charting a path through their avidity, mutual possession, and struggle
for hegemony. Monads are bottomless, chasmic; monadic ethnography an abyssal
endeavour.8
The monads characteristics also suggest the need to deploy a diachronic form of
analysis to fully grasp them. In relation to this, Georgina Born has convincinglyargued about the need to incorporate Tardes theory of imitation-opposition-
innovation in the discussion of his monadology, noting that his method is con-
cerned with analysing not only the elementary structures of process . . . but their
cumulative outcome in historical trajectories of variation or transformation, sta-
bility or stasis (2010: 235).
The black cap, for example, revealed itself to be a continuous variation whose
stability can only be described as a synchronic fiction. The part was a constant
succession of transformations in the association between materials, providers, pro-
cedures, etc. Collaboration as well as competition between monads (or adaptationand opposition in Tardes terms) animated these transformations: the client
demanded a lower price, the glass factory lobbied for a change in materials, the
manufacturer adapted the design to the budget. . .And yet, the part did not become
something else altogether (see Law, 2002). Accounting for its endurance is just as
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important as accounting for its continuous change. In fact, the story of the black
cap is a remarkable tale of resilience (in the form, among other things, of several
re-alignments of the parties involved) on the face of the radical transformations
brought about by the vertical integration of European car manufacturing. The
Tardian monad is a highly appropriate concept to describe this combination of
variation and obduracy.9
Born further argues that the study of monads indeed requires an expanded
analytics of temporalities that goes beyond the monotemporality of becoming,
which can flatten out and pre-empt investigation of the multiplicity of time (Born,
2010: 243). The idea here is that monads are made of heterogeneous temporal
relations, trajectories, and rates of change. In other words, monads are palimpsestic,
an amalgam of temporal sediments; doing monadic ethnography calls for an investi-
gation of their traces, the equivalent of a geological cross-section.10 The black cap,for example, was traversed by the multiplicity of temporalities enacted by its dif-
ferent parts: the long duration of the materials, the shorter duration of quality
standards and machine tools; the high rate of change within transport networks
and the (relative) stability of the workforce. These different temporal trajectories
and histories of change left some traces, which ethnographic fieldwork revealed.
This immanent conceptualization of time has a parallel in the way that mon-
adology approaches space. Rather than situating monads in a pre-existing and
fixed Euclidian matrix, it is perhaps more appropriate to study how monads
enact their own conditions of spatial im/possibility (this is an argument well-articulated in ANT: see Law, 2002: 92; Latour, 2005). Instead of a stable geography
of scales and its concomitant vocabulary of micro and macro, local and global,
monadology relies on a topology of connections and intensity, in which spatial
arrangements are performed and achieved. The black cap tale was not about local
processes affected by global dynamics, but about the enactment of a set of relations
that produced a given spatial arrangement. In other words, the post-Fordist
restructuring of the car industry was not above and afar, but rather a con-
crete and localized wave of changes within the relational organization of the
production.
Towards a monadic ethnography II: Form
This brief account of how Tardes neo-monadology transforms our objects of study
already suggests the basic shape of an ethnographic approach towards them. In
effect, the research of Tardian monads implies a certain monadization of their
research. Questions ofform are, then, central to the debate. Monadic ethnography
relies on formal strategies that can adequately convey the transformation of its
object of study outlined above.
11
One of the defining characteristics of ethnography, at least in its classic sense, is
that it operates from within the society, group or setting it studies and through
interaction with its actors. Monadic ethnography also relies on being conducted
from the inside it is only through relations that we can study relations, as Marilyn
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Strathern and others have argued. Moreover, it is only from within that we can
overcome the illusion of perfectly stable and finished entities and start to discern
their immense internal complexity and agitation. Studying monads from within is
therefore an active rejection of the view from above (or nowhere), that is, an
external, superior, detached perspective (see Haraway, 1988). Monadic ethnog-
raphy is about looking at the world from the monads point of view or, as
Viveiros de Castro (2003) would put it, seeing the worldthe monad sees. Latour
et al. have argued along the same lines that monads are a point of view on all the
other entities taken severally and not as a totality.. . . The whole world, as
Leibniz said, would be grasped or reflected through this idiosyncratic point
of view (Latour et al., 2012: 599). This is an important issue I will come back to in
the conclusion. Tardes monadology implies a multiplicity of possible points of
view; consequently, discovering and adopting such perspectives is part of themonadic ethnographers job.
Again, the story of the black cap can help us advance in the discussion. I con-
structed the text as a non-verbatim conversation for three reasons. First, it was a
way of letting Vicente and Bele ns understanding and description of the production
of the car part drive the narrative instead of mine, or any external point of view.
The dialogic (Bakhtin, 1981) form adopted, inspired by Peter Weiss The
Aesthetics of Resistance12 (2005), was an experiment in removing all (academic)
commentary and taking seriously the way the informants told the story and per-
formed the theoretical work themselves and in their own vernacular. The absenceof a second-level, authorized voice that clarifies, ratifies, explains, etc. was my way
of recognizing that the extraordinary story of the black cap, with all its monadic
quality, belonged to them; it was their theory. It took me a while to recognize that
there was a remarkable isomorphism at play: Tardes monadology had triggered an
interest in exploring objects as relational assemblages that eventually led me to the
black cap; Vicente and Bele n, in turn, deployed a rather monadological strategy in
their account of its fabrication, which I set out to reproduce in my writing. I will
return to the important question of whose ontology we talk about when we talk
about monadology in the conclusion.Secondly, removing quotation marks and dialogue lines highlighted the con-
structed nature of the text. The fragment above is not the transcription of a
taped fieldwork interview; it is are-constructionof notes and recollections of several
conversations, which I assembled and gave to Vicente and Bele n to read and com-
ment. Although the style was solely my choice, the production of the text involved
discussions in which the anonymity of the sensible elements was decided, my inac-
curacies corrected, further detail provided, and the overall tone and direction of the
narrative agreed. However limited our collaboration was, I think it points at an
important methodological strategy and a logical consequence of the commitmentto adopt the monads point of view as opposed to an external one. Vicente and
Bele n acted as the spokesmen for the black cap, as it were; it was only coherent
with the principles of monadic ethnography outlined above to enter a dialogue
with them.
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Thirdly and very briefly, deploying a dialogic format was also a matter of inter-
pellation: I wanted to put the reader in the position of the attentive listener that I
had occupied during fieldwork.
The significance of these three gestures can probably only be gasped by briefly
considering what not trying to engage with the monad from within would look like.
The black cap story could have easily been framed as anexampleof the global post-
Fordist transformation of the car industry which started in the late 1970s. I could
have provided a general description of such transformation as discussed in the
specialist literature and then used fragments of my fieldwork to illustrate how it
wasexperiencedlocally in the context of my study. This would not only reduce the
actors own theory of the reality they inhabit to mere side evidence, but also betray
the fundamental monadological insight that the key to understanding the post-
Fordist transformation lies in the small, in the myriad actions of its tinycomponents.
I would like to conclude this section by making clear that I am not arguing that
dialogic writing is monadic ethnographys only or even preferred formal strategy.
Far from it. My intention was simply to make explicit the choices I made in
this particular instance of monadic description, as a result of trying to accommo-
date the object and the situation I was studying. I would not want to prevent the
development of other forms of monadic ethnography by setting out formal
guidelines.
Conclusion: Ontology, monadology, ethnography
This article has explored the shape ethnography may take if one was to accept
Gabriel Tardes bold monadological hypothesis, namely that everything is a soci-
ety. For Tarde (and later on for Latour), society and social describe a universal
form of association between heterogeneous elements, rather than a specific human
aggregate. The resulting relational assemblages, or monads, are characterized by
their infinitesimal complexity, irreducible heterogeneity, their openness and avidity
toward other monads, and their chronically unstable condition. Tardes monadol-ogy is based on the primacy of difference over identity, the interest in relations of
possession or having rather than a concern over being, and the centrality of
hegemony (both within and between monads) in the conceptualization of relation-
ality. This particular combination of claims we have come to associate with
Deleuzian- and ANT-inspired perspectives is, in my opinion, one of the reasons
why the experiment of (re)thinking ethnography through Tardes monadology is
worth considering: as I have attempted to show in the previous sections, compared
to some versions of ANT, monadic ethnography places a greater emphasis on
relations of power and temporal dynamics; compared to some appropriations ofDeleuzian theory, it is less speculative and more committed to fieldwork, to making
sense of these assemblages from within, to following the actors. Monadic ethnog-
raphy may be in a position to balance out Deleuzian and Latourian readings
of Tarde and negotiate a tricky yet productive in-betweenness (elsewhere Ive
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explored this in relation to the conceptualization of political action, see Marrero-
Guillamo n, 2013).
Inasmuch as Tardes monadology constitutes a strong ontological affirmation
with regard to the make-up of the world, it may be productive to relate the project of
a monadic ethnography to recent debates around the so-called ontological turn in
the social sciences particularly within anthropology and Science and Technology
Studies (STS). After all, the usefulness, appropriateness and politics of this growing
interest in metaphysical questions in the context of social research cannot be taken
for granted. Although a full account of this ongoing debate is outside the scope of
this conclusion, it may be useful to briefly revisit some key positions within it.13
In anthropology, the question of ontology arises out of the perennial challenge
of appropriately attending to systems of thought and theories which are other to
ours, perhaps even incompatible. For Eduardo Viveiros de Castro, one of the earlyproponents of a becoming-ontology for the discipline,
the language of ontology is important for one specific and, lets say, tactical reason. It
acts as a counter-measure to a derealizing trick frequently played against the natives
thinking, which turns this thought into a kind of sustained phantasy, by reducing it to
the dimensions of a form of knowledge or representation, that is, to an epistemology
or a worldview. (2003: 18)
The need to take seriously the ontologies of the peoples one studies, that is, not asworldviews but as worlds that are viewed, not as opinions but as objectively
experienced worlds, is at the basis of Viveiros de Castros (2010, 2011) groundbreak-
ing work on Amerindian perspectivism an ontology he defines as perpendicular
and incommensurable to ours. Whereas Western ontology is based on the assump-
tion that only one world/nature exists, which can, however, be interpreted or rep-
resented in many different ways (mono-naturalism, multiculturalism), perspectivism
inverts this and establishes that there is one culture (shared among humans, spirits,
animals and some plants) and many natures (mono-culturalism, multinaturalism).
All entities see (represent) the worldin the same way, through the same categories(food, home, etc.)but the world they see is different (blood for us, beer for jaguars;
mud for us, ceremonial palace for tapirs). The importance of encountering this
radically other ontology for Viveiros de Castro lies in its capacity to unsettle
Western ontology, in particular its self-perceived superiority. By acknowledging
the existence of alternative ontologies and engaging with them as proper metaphys-
ical systems, anthropology argues Viveiros de Castro may finally be in a position
to close its karmic cycle and take on its new mission as the theory-practice of the
permanent decolonisation of thought (2010: 14) or, in other words, to become the
science of the ontological self-determination of the worlds peoples (2003: 18).In sharp contrast, Phillipe Descolas work (2013) has engaged with the multi-
plicity of ontologies found in ethnographic studies as a problem of classification,
and consequently developed a taxonomy based on how similarities and differences
between humans and non-humans are established across two distinct dimensions,
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interiority and physicality. Western ontology, which he calls naturalism, dis-
tinguishes humans from non-humans based on their internal difference, namely
that only humans have a soul, consciousness, subjectivity and language. This ontol-
ogy, dominant in the West since the 17th century, co-exists with three others:
animism, totemism and analogism. Perspectivism, for instance, would be a
particular type of animism, where the distinction between humans and non-
humans is based on their physicality, i.e. their physiological, perceptual and sen-
sory-motor features. In short, in the work of Descola, the language ontology is an
instrument for developing a relativist universalism in anthropology rather than,
as Viveiros de Castro argued, a bomb in the disciplines headquarters (see Latour,
2009, for a review of a debate between the two).
Yet another distinguishable form of engagement with ontology has been articu-
lated by STS scholars. In a recent review of the ontological turn in their field,Woolgar and Lezaun (2013) argue that while the turn may indeed be seen as a
move away from epistemology (the object of inquiry is the very existence or being
of entities, not merely the modes of knowing pre-existing entities), this distinction has
rarely been stable within STS, a perspective whose main concern is the analysis of how
things come to be what they are, how objects and subjects are enacted and performed
in other words, how in practice, and in detail, particular ontologies are achieved.
Rather than committing to a particular ontology or theory of what there is,
our fields current curiosity about ontologies and their enactment is best understood asa way of extending its idiosyncratic critical sensibility an appreciation of fluidity in
seemingly stable entities, a recognition of difference beyond claims to singularity (and
vice versa), a reluctance to take the world at face value to the realm of the ready-
made, to the world of those entities whose being might seem most unproblematic and
ordinary. (2013: 336)
Where, then, stands monadic ethnography in all this? In my opinion, it represents a
fourth mode of engagement with ontology, different from the three above and yet
with selective affinities to all of them. This is because the monadology it is foundedupon is both an ontology in itself (a theory of the make-up of reality based on
monads and their relations) and a method for studying the monads own ontolo-
gies. Tardes monadology is therefore both an alternative to hegemonic naturalism
(another ontology), and a way of making sense of a world woven from multiple
ontologies (Lorenc, pers. comm.) (a privileged route onto otherontologies). At the
same time, Tardes definition of monads as more or less fragile achievements
implies a sustained interest in how they come to be, how they attain and maintain
their ontological status. In his afterword to MS, Theo Lorenc develops the idea
that Tardes monadology implies a continuity between the ontological activity ofthe researcher and that of her objects:
the scientific or metaphysical theories we develop to explain reality would not be
foreign to the elements, but on the contrary, would be profoundly continuous with
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the cosmic plans which form their own most intimate reality. Each element has, and in
some sense is, an ontological theory of its own. Thus, Tardean metaphysics could be
described as an ontology of ontologies: the universe is woven from the theorizing
activity of its innumerable elements. (Lorenc, 2012: 92)
With this fractal scheme of self-similarity, Tarde elegantly addresses the ontological
duplicity inherent to his argument. When it comes to doing ethnography, I would
argue this duplicity is not so much a problem as a basic fieldwork condition: the
people we work with also have their theories about the make-up of the world, and
the relationship between theirs and ours is an empirical matter. In this article, an
instance of remarkable isomorphism was presented but it is not hard to imagine
scenarios of conflict, incommensurability or plain misunderstanding.14
Faced with a similar predicament, Henare et al. (2007) argued that hostingalternative cosmologies does not necessarily mean replacing the old episteme of all
epistemes with a totalizing ontology of all ontologies, but rather recuperat[ing]
a facility [for concept production] informants may already have and developing a
methodology that might generate a multiplicity of theories (2007: 16). This
approach in turn echoes Latours argument that ANT analysts should only possess
aninfra-language whose role is simply to help them become attentive to the actors
own fully developed meta-language, a reflexive account of what they are saying
(2005: 49) a move that, as he acknowledges, can be considered a revitalization
of ethnomethodologys programme: the study of the procedures by which societyis produced by its members, and the theories they use to make sense of it
(Garfinkel, 1967).
With regards to monadic ethnography, I would not be disappointed if the
engagement with ontology translates into a minimal and rather humble aspiration:
to become a form of research that, starting from a monadological understanding of
reality, is open to engaging with the monads performative power at all levels,
including their theoretical and ontological work. Monadic ethnography may
then become a battleground for the competition between theories, or a version
(or a variation) of the monads own theorizing work. On occasion, it maybecome a vehicle for the transformation perhaps even the possession of our
conceptualizations by those of the monads. In any case, an ethnographic approach
based on the respect towards and attentiveness to the actors own theories seems to
me a valuable first step for this newly born creature; it carries with it an invitation
to devise forms of theoretical collaboration and co-production with the people
we work with and a call for an ethnographic practice which is seen, at its core,
as an inventive activity, a machine for distributing new ideas, concepts, theories,
beings.
Acknowledgements
I would like to thank Theo Lorenc for his generous comments on this article, and more
generally for his long-term availability to discuss all things Gabriel Tarde. Melissa
Ferna ndez read the first draft closely and provided numerous useful insights. I would also
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like to thank the three anonymous reviewers for their careful and critical examination of my
argument it is now, I hope, much more coherent. Last but not least, I wish to dedicate this
article to the memory of Vicente, whose own version of monadology inspired this text and
who, sadly, is no longer with us.
Notes
1. A video recording of the debate, featuring Bruno Latour as Gabriel Tarde and Bruno
Karsenti as Emile Durkheim, can be found at: http://www.bruno-latour.fr/node/434
(accessed 24 June 2014).
2. Tarde/Durkheim: Trajectories of the Social, at the University of Cambridge, 1415
March 2008.
3. Revue dHistoire des Sciences Humaines, no. 3, 2000; Multitudes, no. 7, 2001; and
Economy and Society, vol. 36, no. 4, 2007.4. See Candea (2010b) for an excellent overview of Tardes work written with an anthropo-
logical sensibility. The recuperation of Tarde within social psychology is also remark-
able and offers an alternative path into his ideas (see Lo pez and Sa nchez-Criado, 2006;
Lubek, 1981; Van Ginneken, 1992).
5. All the names of individuals and businesses have been anonymized, with the exception
of Irachetas family. When negotiating the publication of the text, and on the face of
their disappearance as a family business, they chose to appear under their real names as
an act of memory.
6. I thank Theo Lorenc for this formulation.
7. The parallels with Foucaults microphysics of power are evident, and were alreadypointed out by Deleuze (2006).
8. This tentative vocabulary, developed in dialogue with Theo Lorenc, is an antidote to
metaphors of flatness routinely used to refer to relational ontologies, and which in our
opinion betray the vertiginous verticality of Tardes ontology.
9. See Harman (2009) on the difficulty the concept of actor-network has on this issue.
10. It falls outside the scope of this text to explore the relationship between Tardes monads
and the work of his successor as Chair of Philosophy at the College de France, Henri
Bergson. Bergsons (1962) notion of the virtual coexistence of several times in a single
plane is here particularly relevant (see also Deleuze, 1988).
11. Granted, the question of finding an appropriate formal strategy for our ethnographictales is not specific to monadic ethnography, and ever since the publication ofWriting
Culture (Clifford and Marcus, 1986) discussions around the literary grounds of ethno-
graphic strategies of representation have been commonplace. I have been inevitably
influenced by these debates, even though I read anthropology in the context of active
rejection of the disciplines post-modern drift.
12. This epic novel, told from the perspective of a nameless young German worker, unfolds
between 1937 and 1945 and narrates a collective experience of war and militancy in a
journey through the rise of Nazism, the Spanish Civil War, and exile and underground
resistance in France and Sweden. It was its form that I thought was relevant to a
monadic approach to writing: the book consists of extremely long blocks of text, with-out quotation marks, in which a plurality of voices, temporalities and spaces are
engaged in dialogic tension, without ever succumbing to dialectical resolution.
13. For an excellent introduction to the turn, see Candea and Alcayna-Stevens (2012);
Carrithers et al. (2010); Jensen and Morita (2012).
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14. On the slippage or contradictions produced by the different uses of ontology as
essence vs theory, see the debate between Pedersen (2012) and Laidlaw and Heywood
(2013).
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Author Biography
Isaac Marrero-Guillamo nis Lecturer in Anthropology at Goldsmiths, University of
London. His recent work has focused on processes of urban renewal in Barcelona
and London and the configuration of spaces of dissent through activism and art-
istic practice.
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